TY - JOUR
T1 - Sex expression, skewed sex ratios, and microhabitat distribution in the dioecious desert moss Syntrichia caninervis (Pottiaceae)
AU - Bowker, Matthew A.
AU - Stark, Lloyd R.
AU - McLetchie, D. Nicholas
AU - Mishler, Brent D.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - The moss Syntrichia caninervis is the dominant soil bryophyte in a blackbrush (Coleogyne ramosissima) community in the southern Nevada Mojave Desert, with a mean cover of 6.3%. A survey of the 10-ha study site revealed an expressed ramet sex ratio of 14 ♀ : 1 ♂ (N = 890), with 85% of ramets not expressing sex over their life span, and an expressed population sex ratio of 40 ♀ : 2 ♂: 1 ♀ ♂ (female:male:mixed-sex, N = 89), with 52% of populations not expressing sex. A greater incidence of sex expression was associated with shaded microsites, higher soil moisture content, and taller ramets. Shaded microsites had higher surface soil moisture levels than exposed microsites. In the exposed microhabitat, surface soil moisture was positively correlated with ramet height but not with sex expression. Male ramets and populations were restricted to shaded microhabitats, whereas female ramets and populations were found in both shaded and exposed microhabitats, suggesting gender specialization. The rarity of mature sporophytes, found in 0% of the ramets sampled and in only 3% of the populations, is probably due to the rarity of mixed-sex populations. We hypothesize that mixed-sex populations are rare because of factors relating to male rarity and that the differential cost of sex expression reduces the clonal growth capacity of male individuals.
AB - The moss Syntrichia caninervis is the dominant soil bryophyte in a blackbrush (Coleogyne ramosissima) community in the southern Nevada Mojave Desert, with a mean cover of 6.3%. A survey of the 10-ha study site revealed an expressed ramet sex ratio of 14 ♀ : 1 ♂ (N = 890), with 85% of ramets not expressing sex over their life span, and an expressed population sex ratio of 40 ♀ : 2 ♂: 1 ♀ ♂ (female:male:mixed-sex, N = 89), with 52% of populations not expressing sex. A greater incidence of sex expression was associated with shaded microsites, higher soil moisture content, and taller ramets. Shaded microsites had higher surface soil moisture levels than exposed microsites. In the exposed microhabitat, surface soil moisture was positively correlated with ramet height but not with sex expression. Male ramets and populations were restricted to shaded microhabitats, whereas female ramets and populations were found in both shaded and exposed microhabitats, suggesting gender specialization. The rarity of mature sporophytes, found in 0% of the ramets sampled and in only 3% of the populations, is probably due to the rarity of mixed-sex populations. We hypothesize that mixed-sex populations are rare because of factors relating to male rarity and that the differential cost of sex expression reduces the clonal growth capacity of male individuals.
KW - Bryophyte
KW - Cryptogamic crust
KW - Desert
KW - Haploid dioecy
KW - Ramet
KW - Sex expression
KW - Sex ratio
KW - Sporophyte
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U2 - 10.2307/2656595
DO - 10.2307/2656595
M3 - Article
C2 - 10766723
AN - SCOPUS:0033765709
SN - 0002-9122
VL - 87
SP - 517
EP - 526
JO - American Journal of Botany
JF - American Journal of Botany
IS - 4
ER -